28 research outputs found

    Multivariate modeling of chromium-induced oxidative stress and biochemical changes in plants of Pistia stratiotes L.

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    Biochemical changes in the plants of Pistia stratiotes L., a free floating macrophyte exposed to different concentrations of hexavalent chromium (0, 10, 40, 60, 80 and 160 ΌM) for 48, 96 and 144 h were studied. Chromium-induced oxidative stress in macrophyte was investigated using the multivariate modeling approaches. Cluster analysis rendered two fairly distinct clusters (roots and shoots) of similar characteristics in terms of their biochemical responses. Discriminant analysis identified ascorbate peroxidase (APX) as discriminating variable between the root and shoot tissues. Principal components analysis results suggested that malondialdehyde (MDA), superoxide dismutase (SOD), APX, non-protein thiols (NP-SH), cysteine, ascorbic acid, and Cr-accumulation are dominant in root tissues, whereas, protein and guaiacol peroxidase (GPX) in shoots of the plant. Discriminant partial least squares analysis results further confirmed that MDA, SOD, NP-SH, cysteine, GPX, APX, ascorbic acid and Cr-accumulation dominated in the root tissues, while protein in the shoot. Three-way analysis helped in visualizing simultaneous influence of metal concentration and exposure duration on biochemical variables in plant tissues. The multivariate approaches, thus, allowed for the interpretation of the induced biochemical changes in the plant tissues exposed to chromium, which otherwise using the conventional approaches is difficult

    An efficient antioxidant system and heavy metal exclusion from leaves make Solanum cheesmaniae more tolerant to Cu than its cultivated counterpart

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    Copper (Cu) is an abundant metal in the environment coming from anthropogenic activities and natural sources that, in excess, easily becomes phytotoxic to most species, being its accumulation in plants considered an environmental threat. This study aimed to compare the physiological and molecular responses of Solanum lycopersicum and its wild counterpart Solanum cheesmaniae to Cu stress. In particular, we wanted to address the hypothesis that S. cheesmaniae is more adapted to Cu stress than S. lycopersicum, since the former is equipped with a more efficient antioxidant defense system than the latter. Biomarkers of oxidative status (lipid peroxidation, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and superoxide anion (O.− 2 ) levels) revealed a more pronounced imbalance in the redox homeostasis in shoots of S. lycopersicum than in S. cheesmaniae in response to Cu. Furthermore, the activity of key antioxidant enzymes clearly differed in both species in response to Cu. Catalase (CAT) activity increased in S. cheesmaniae shoots but decreased in the domestic species, as well as ascorbate peroxidase (APX). Both species preferentially accumulated Cu in the radicular system, although a great increase in the aerial parts of S. lycopersicum was measured, while in leaves of Cu- treated S. cheesmaniae, the levels of Cu were not changed. Overall, results validated the hypothesis that S. cheesmaniae is more tolerant to excess Cu than S. lycopersicum and the data provided will help the development of breeding strategies toward the improvement of the resistance/tolerance of cultivated tomato species to heavy metal stress.This research was partially supported by national funds provided by Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) through PEst-OE/BIA/UI4046/2014 (FCT through BioISI) and through the research project PTDC/ AGR-PRO/7028/2014.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Arsenate Causes Differential Acute Toxicity to Two P-deprived Genotypes of Rice Seedlings ( Oryza sativa L.)

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    Significant genotypic difference in response to arsenate toxicity in rice (Oryza sativa) was investigated in root elongation, arsenate uptake kinetics, physiological and biochemical response and arsenic (As) speciation. Uptake kinetics data showed that P-deprived genotype 94D-54 had a little higher As uptake than P-deprived 94D-64, but the difference was not large enough to cause acute toxicity in P-deprived 94D-54. There was no difference in tissue P concentrations between the two genotypes under P deficient conditions. In addition, arsenic speciation in plant tissues (using high performance liquid chromatographyinductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry) was not different between P pretreatments and between genotypes. P-deprived genotype 94D-54 suffered much higher stress induced by arsenate toxicity than P-deprived genotype 94D-64, in terms of lipid peroxidation, tissue H2O2 concentrations and exosmosis of K, P and As. However, P-deprived 94D-54 also had higher overproduction of enzymatic antioxidants (with higher GPX, SOD, CAT) and NPT (non-protein thiols) than P-deprived 94D-64. It appeared that, the higher sensitivity of P-deprived 94D-54 to arsenate toxicity might cause the overproduction of NPT, thus leading to the depletion of GSH and to the accumulation of H2O2. The differential sensitivity of the two genotypes has major implications for breeding rice for As affected paddy soil
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